Foursquare for BlackBerry: I'm At CrackBerry.com

Who doesn't love to be rewarded for the doing the simplest things? Whether you've won an eating contest or a drinking game, earning some kind of recognition, badge or t-shirt always feels good. Foursquare does just that, for those of you familiar with the social networking service. All you have to do is be at some place, check in and let your friends know where you are and you earn points and badges. While Foursquare has had an application available for iPhone and Android for some time, it has recently become officially available for BlackBerry 8000 and 9000 series devices and I'm here to take an in-depth look at what it has to offer.

What Foursquare is All About

The idea behind Foursquare is like that of other location-based social networking services: you let people know where you are, you can discover new places and hopefully make new friends in the process. Along the way, you earn points and unlock badges to let everyone know how adventurous or bored or boring you are. If you check into the same place enough, you just might be crowned mayor of the joint.

Features, Navigation & More

When you first click on the Foursquare icon, an image of a guy doing a behind-the-back foursquare pass shows up with the status above - it starts by checking your connection and then it logs you in or takes you to the login screen. After entering your login information, the first screen you're taken to is a list of yours and your friends' check-ins throughout the week. Like other Foursquare apps, it shows your friend's name, where they checked in and when. If they added any notes, shout-outs or badges are unlocked, those are shown, too. From this screen, you have the option to check in or shout. The layout is pretty clean and streamlined - very intuitive.

On the upper-right corner, there are three icons for Friends, Places and More. The default screen you start with is Friends, as mentioned above. The second icon is for Places and clicking on that will generate a list of places nearby you by using your phone's built-in GPS. If you don't see your spot on the list, you can scroll all the way to the bottom and click on "Not in list?" and add the location, information and address. Once you finally choose your location, you can check in, send that info to Twitter, or view the mayor, nearby tweets, the location's Yelp listing and view/add tips about the place. Are the martinis good? Should you stay away from the tuna tartare? You can add that information there.

The third option after Friends and Places is More. From there, you can view Foursquare's information and an email address for reporting bugs or making suggestions. On More, you can also view the leaderboard amongst you and your friends, although clicking on it will take you to the BlackBerry browser instead of opening it within the app - a minor inconvenience. Lastly, you can also change your notification settings here and choose between on, off or goodnight.

Still A Baby With Room For Growth

Because it's in beta right now, it's a pretty bare-bones application but it does almost everything you need to do in Foursquare. The layout is very simple and intuitive: if you've just signed up for Foursquare and are using the app for the very first time, you'd have absolutely no issues navigating around the app and learning what the social networking service is all about. And after you're done bragging to your friends that you've just checked into the most exclusive club in your 'hood, you can log out, exit the app, or leave it running in the background to get notifications of friend check-ins.

I've been using Foursquare since last summer and if I could rate this application on a scale from 1 to 5, I'd give it a 4 based on its intuitiveness and design. It gets the job done and it's very clean. I do wish it had things like icons by your friends' names, but I'm sure the little details will come as subsequent versions do. If you're a Foursquare user and you have a compatible BlackBerry, there is absolutely no reason to skip downloading this app!

Reader comments

Foursquare for BlackBerry: I'm At CrackBerry.com

Have you tried Foursquare on the Storm? It's almost easier to use the mobile website than the app. No support for landscape mode, scrolling is inverse to how the Storm natively scrolls, buttons are nearly impossible to select.

I realize it's still in beta, but the Storm version almost seems more like an alpha release.

But what's the point? I mean, the website sells the app by saying you become Mayor and the places offer you discounts / freebies / etc.

If the store / shop / bar / club isn't in the system... why do I, the end user, advertise for them?

And if I'm trying to find my friends... I call them or text them with the phone (or use Google Latitude). Plus, I have to get my friends to add this to their phone or it seems almost useless right now.

I certainly need to spend some time with this... I'm in no way saying it's not a good app or good idea, but I have yet to figure out how best to use it for me at least.

You can add venues on the website quite easily. I wouldn't expect to see them magically appear... someone in your area will have to slowly add them over time. If you have a few places that you hit regularly though it only takes a few minutes.

I've had it for a few days now on my Curve 8900 and am loving it! I live in a small town too and I've been getting points and badges left and right because I've been adding all my favorite little places that I go and it only takes a few seconds to do. Only took me about 2 days to be the mayor of somewhere too because there's so few people in my area using the app. But I think its a lot of fun and if you go out quite a bit, its a great way to let your friends know where you are.

its worth the download truly once you get into it! its kinda like twitter was at first... you have to get friends and then you can really use it! but i reviewed it on my blog & youtube... check it out! http://www.youtube.com/CurvyGirl8900

I really like the program, the ease of use, the idea behind the product...

I just don't like that it's really based on the honor code, because anyone can 'check in' to anywhere even if its not true. For example, if i want to say im in amsterdam at a certain bar, then i am officially there - and could even be mayor there as well. There should be a way that your check in HAS to match your gps location at all times).

i mean, whats stopping anyone from saying that they visited hundreds of places a day from the comfort of their house?

I read on the help section of the site that they've got plans to curb the cheaters who would blindly sign in anywhere and everywhere. I don't know if it's going to be GPS related or what, but they stated that they're hoping to have something going soon after the BlackBerry beta release, so hopefully it'll be soon.

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